UPDATE: MRFF calls out chaplain who says not all religions need constitutional protection

According to Stars and Stripes, the Air Force is standing behind Capt. Sonny Hernandez who says anyone serving in the military who doesn't adhere to Christianity is serving Satan.

—ORIGINAL POST 10:01 a.m. MONDAY, SEPT. 18, 2017—-

Mikey Weinstein, founder of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, has complained for years that fundamental Christianity has taken over the military in violation of the Constitution.

Now, Newsweek reports, and other major news cites are following suit, that a chaplain who says Christians "serve Satan" if they support troops' right to practice other faiths.

Here's the first part of the Newsweek story:

A U.S. Air Force chaplain who ministers to thousands of men and women at an Ohio base is asserting that Christians in the U.S. Armed Forces “serve Satan” and are “grossly in error” if they support service members' right to practice other faiths.

In an article posted on BarbWire.com three days ago, Captain Sonny Hernandez, an Air Force Reserve chaplain for the 445th Airlift Wing at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, criticized Christian service members who rely on the Constitution “and not Christ.”

He wrote: “Counterfeit Christians in the Armed forces will appeal to the Constitution, and not Christ, and they have no local church home—which means they have no accountability for their souls (Heb. 13:17). This is why so many professing Christian service members will say: We ‘support everyone’s right’ to practice their faith regardless if they worship a god different from ours because the Constitution protects this right.”

Hernandez continued: “Christian service members who openly profess and support the rights of Muslims, Buddhists, and all other anti-Christian worldviews to practice their religions—because the language in the Constitution permits—are grossly in error, and deceived.”

MRFF, Newsweek reports, has asked the Department of Defense Inspector General's Office to investigate Hernandez, noting "many complaints" about his commentary over the last several years.

In a statement, MRFF said Hernandez "blatantly and indisputably advocates the subordinating of the U.S. Constitution to his personal Christian ideology and violated his Oath of Office as a commissioned officer, as well as Title 18, U.S. Code § 2387’s criminal prohibitions against counseling or urging insubordination, disloyalty, or ‘refusal of duty’ to other military members."